- Dr. Walden: Have you heard of Facebook?
- Paul Spector: Yes.
- Dr. Walden: What is it?
- Paul Spector: It's a social networking site.
- Dr. Walden: And what about Twitter?
- Paul Spector: I don't know what that is.
- Dr. Walden: So you don't know what a tweet is, or tweeting?
- Paul Spector: The sound a bird makes.
- Dr. Walden: Can you describe what the memory loss feels like to you?
- Paul Spector: Well, it feels like it's night-time and there's a thunderstorm and I'm standing on a hillside and I've been asked to draw a map of the valley below. There's lightning flashes. They light up the land, but only for a few seconds, not long enough to draw the map.
- Kiera Sheridan: You came close with dying. What do you now understand death to be? What does death mean to you now?
- Paul Spector: I know that life is our only true possession.
- Paul Spector: I've no reason to think that people are lying to me, but I don't feel it. I'm told I'm in trouble with the police. I don't know what I've done. I think that I might be different, but I don't know why. I feel like I'm an all-right person? It will all come back to me, won't it?
- Dr. Walden: Your anterograde memory is working well. Anything else you've forgotten, you can relearn.
- Paul Spector: But the ownership has gone.
- [last lines]
- Kiera Sheridan: [to Spector] I'll see you in the morning. Try and get some sleep.
- [pauses at the door]
- Kiera Sheridan: I'll pray for you.